Idaho State Tree - Western White Pine - Pinus monticola

Leaf: Acicular, 2 to 4 inches long, fascicles of 5, blue-green with white lines
of stomatal bloom on two of the three needle surfaces, persist 3 to 4 years,
bundle sheath is deciduous, apex blunt.

Flower: Monoecious; male cones are small, yellow, and clustered near the tips
of branches; female cones are larger, almost round, greenish-pink in color,
and clustered near the tips of branches in the upper parts of the crown.

Fruit: Large cylindrical woody cones, 5 to 12" long, thin and curved. Brown
when mature; scales thin and unarmed, typically tipped with globs of white resin;
very short stalk.

Twig: Moderately stout and grayish-brown.

Bark: Initially thin and grayish-green later becoming up to 2 inches thick,
gray to purplish-gray and broken into square or rectangular blocks, not ridged
and furrowed. Dark bands commonly encircle the tree where whorls of branches
have fallen off.

Form: Tall, straight, evergreen conifer growing to 180 feet tall and 4 feet
in diameter with an open crown, long up-raised branches near the top (horizontal
lower down); bole commonly free of branches for half its length.